The irony of her religiously-rooted village having been the one to create the milestone was not lost on Lemieux.

"It's quite funny," she told CBC News over the phone Friday.

That church is now a community and cultural centre, she noted, and saving the old building by making it so was what got her into politics in the first place.

Julie Lemieux won the mayoral election with 48 per cent of the vote. (Radio-Canada)

Lemieux, 45, isn't only the first known trans person to be elected in Canada, she is the first woman to be elected in her municipality, founded in 1880.

"It's really a place and a village that is bold and innovative," she said. "We're writing history and I have a lot to offer."

Lemieux, who won 48 per cent of the Très-Saint-Redempteur vote in the Nov. 5 province-wide municipal elections, told Radio-Canada earlier that she believes the villagers chose her "to incarnate change."

"People needed renewal in the village," she said.

Openness in Quebec's villages

"It shows something we don't necessarily see in the media: in the villages, too, there is acceptance and social openness," said Lemieux..

She said the fact that she was born a man "is an open secret" in Très-Saint-Redempteur.

Some supporters of the opposition tried to marginalize her candidacy, but it didn't work. She said she didn't feel judged as she went around meeting constituents.

The church of Très-Saint-Rédempteur is now used as a cultural centre. (http://www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca)

Voter turnout in the village of fewer than 1,000 was high — 70 per cent — considering many municipal elections in Quebec's small communities go acclaimed, and the province's average voter turnout hovers at around 45 per cent.

Winds of change

Très-Saint-Redempteur resident Chantal Brault said she's happy with the village's new mayor.

"Her orientation doesn't change anything for me. We don't look at that, we look at her skills," she said, noting she'd met Lemieux a couple times.

Brault described her as "jovial," and said she defended her points well.

A key election issue in the village has been whether to allow chickens in residents' backyards, something Lemieux has supported on social media and says she will make one of her first orders of business.

Other plans for the municipality include injecting life into its cultural centre, establishing an "Artisans' Route" and creating a space where merchants can get more visibility and where villagers can have better access to the services they offer.